Malay Magic _ Being an introduction to the - Walter William Skeat

(Perpustakaan Sri Jauhari) #1

had in plenty; the evidence, too, of sober-minded men, whose words in a Court
of Justice would bring conviction to the mind of the most obstinate jurymen, and
be more than sufficient to hang the most innocent of prisoners. The Malays
know well how Haji ʿAbdallah, the native of the little state of Korinchi in
Sumatra, was caught naked in a tiger trap, and thereafter purchased his liberty at
the price of the buffaloes he had slain while he marauded in the likeness of a
beast. They know of the countless Korinchi men who have vomited feathers,
after feasting upon fowls, when for the nonce they had assumed the forms of
tigers; and of those other men of the same race who have left their garments and
their trading packs in thickets whence presently a tiger has emerged. All these
things the Malays know have happened, and are happening to-day, in the land in
which they live, and with these plain evidences before their eyes, the empty
assurances of the enlightened European that Were-Tigers do not, and never did


exist, excite derision not unmingled with contempt.”^83


Writing on the same theme, Sir Frank Swettenham says:—


“Another article of almost universal belief is that the people of a small State in
Sumatra called Korinchi have the power of assuming at will the form of a tiger,
and in that disguise they wreak vengeance on those they wish to injure. Not
every Korinchi man can do this, but still the gift of this strange power of
metamorphosis is pretty well confined to the people of the small Sumatran State.
At night when respectable members of society should be in bed, the Korinchi
man slips down from his hut, and, assuming the form of a tiger, goes about
‘seeking whom he may devour.’


“I have heard of four Korinchi men arriving in a district of Perak, and that night
a number of fowls were taken by a tiger. The strangers left and went farther up
country, and shortly after only three of them returned and stated that a tiger had
just been killed, and they begged the local headman to bury it.


“On another occasion some Korinchi men appeared and sought hospitality in a
Malay house, and there also the fowls disappeared in the night, and there were
unmistakable traces of the visit of a tiger, but the next day one of the visitors fell
sick, and shortly after vomited chicken-feathers.


“It is only fair to say that the Korinchi people strenuously deny the tendencies
and the power ascribed to them, but aver that they properly belong to the

Free download pdf